mount_pcfs

Synopsis

Description

mount attaches an MS-DOS file system (pcfs) to the file system hierarchy
at the mount_point, which is the pathname of a directory. If mount_point
has any contents prior to the mount operation, these are hidden until
the file system is unmounted.

If mount is invoked with special or mount_point as the only arguments,
mount will search /etc/vfstab to fill in the missing arguments, including the
FSType-specific_options; see mount(1M) for more details.

The special argument can be one of two special device file types:

A floppy disk, such as /dev/diskette0 or /dev/diskette1.

A DOS logical drive on a hard disk expressed as device-name:logical-drive , where device-name specifies the special block device-file for the whole disk and logical-drive is either a drive letter (c through z) or a drive number (1 through 24). Examples are /dev/dsk/c0t0d0p0:c and /dev/dsk/c0t0d0p0:1.

The special device file type must have a formatted MS-DOS file system
with either a 12-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit File Allocation Table.

Options

Specify pcfs file system-specific options. The following options are supported:

foldcase | nofoldcase

Force uppercase characters in filenames to lowercase when reading them from the filesystem. This is for compatibility with the previous behavior of pcfs. The default is nofoldcase.

hidden | nohidden

Allow or disallow listing of files with hidden or system bits set. Option hidden is the default. When nohidden is effect, hidden and system files are neither visible nor accessible. Note that PCFS in previous releases of the Solaris operating system used the nohidden option as the default.

atime | noatime

Enable or disable write access timestamps on DOS-formatted media. Default for fixed disks is atime, while for removable media noatime is used. The latter default is so that writes to flash-based media (“memory sticks”) can be minimized, to prolong lifetime.

timezone=timezone

Timestamps on DOS-formatted media are recorded in the local time of the recording system. This can cause confusion when accessing removable media in which the recording and receiving system use different time zones. Use this option to force media timestamps to be interpreted for a specific time zone. The mount_pcfs command converts the given time zone name into a numerical offset that is passed to the pcfs kernel module, using the same rules as described in environ(5) for the TZ environment variable. By default, the timezone value is taken from the TZ environment variable.

See Also

Notes

If the directory on which a file system is to be mounted
is a symbolic link, the file system is mounted on the directory
to which the symbolic link refers, rather than on top of the
symbolic link itself.